Dean Winchester is a high school drop out with a GED and a give’em Hell attitude. He’s also got an ex-wife demanding child support, a finance company on his ass about his overdue car repayments, and an eviction notice pending—he can’t keep dodging his landlord forever.
One thing he doesn’t have is a job, on account of him getting laid off four months ago—something he still hasn’t told his family about.
Times are tough and Dean is getting desperate. He needs cash fast, which is how he ends up working as a freelance skip tracer for sleazy bail bondsman Fergus ‘Crowley’ MacLeod.
Dean’s first bail jumper is none other than local bad-boy-turned-good-cop, Castiel Novak—a man with whom Dean has history. Novak is a hot guy in hot water—wanted for murder—and to Dean he’s worth a ten grand fee. Is he guilty? Dean tells himself he doesn’t care. The only question worth asking is: will Dean get his man?

Adding to a mounting sense of constitutional crisis ahead of Tuesday’s crucial parliamentary vote, No 10 is braced for more resignations of ministers and aides who want another referendum, or who believe May’s deal fails to deliver on Brexit.

Andy Grove was a Hungarian refugee who escaped communism, studied engineering, and ultimately led the personal computer revolution as the CEO of Intel. He died earlier this year in Silicon Valley after a long fight with Parkinson’s disease.

He looked at the other man and drew a complete blank. Where his name should be, there was nothing. No name. No birthday. He didn’t know where he was or what had brought him there. He couldn’t remember being shot, or why someone would want to shoot him. There was nothing. No parents. No siblings. No childhood memories. No adult memories either.
“I don’t remember anything.”